Abstract

This study aimed to determine the optimal rotor spacing of two vertical-axis wind turbines, which are simulated by miniature models arranged side-by-side with a relatively low aspect ratio. Wind tunnel experiments with a pair of 3-D printed model rotors were conducted at a uniform velocity. A series of experiments were conducted involving both incremental adjustments to the rotor gaps, g, and the rotational direction of each rotor. Increases in the power and the related flow patterns were observed in all three arrangements: Co-Rotating (CO), Counter-Up (CU), and Counter-Down (CD). The maximum phase-synchronized rotational speed occurs at the narrowest gap in the CD arrangement. Meanwhile, local maxima arise in the CO and CU arrangements at g/D < 1, where D is the rotor diameter. From an engineering perspective, the optimal rotor spacing is g/D = 0.2 with the CO arrangement, using the same two rotors rotating in the same direction. Based on flow visualization using a smoke-wire method at a narrower gap opening of 0.2D, the wake width in the case of the CU arrangement was remarkably narrower than those obtained in the CO and CD arrangements. In the CU arrangement, a movement towards the center of the rotor pair of the nominal front-stagnation point of each rotor was confirmed via flow visualization. This finding explains a reduction tendency in the rotational speed of the rotors via a reduction in the lift in the CU arrangement.

Highlights

  • Experimental evidence concerning the optimal rotor spacing between two vertical-axis wind turbines, abbreviated to VAWTs, is required to help fulfill our enormous global energy requirements

  • In the CU arrangement, a movement towards the center of the rotor pair of the nominal front-stagnation point of each rotor was confirmed via flow visualization

  • The augmentation of the power by using a pair of counter-rotating VAWTs had been known, at the latest, in 2004 by the Patent of Thomas, Dabiri [1] firstly proposed and investigated a wind farm in which a lot of pairs of counter-rotating VAWTs were arrayed like a fish schooling

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Summary

Introduction

Experimental evidence concerning the optimal rotor spacing between two vertical-axis wind turbines, abbreviated to VAWTs, is required to help fulfill our enormous global energy requirements. The augmentation of the power by using a pair of counter-rotating VAWTs had been known, at the latest, in 2004 by the Patent of Thomas, Dabiri [1] firstly proposed and investigated a wind farm in which a lot of pairs of counter-rotating VAWTs were arrayed like a fish schooling. He demonstrated a power density 6–9 times larger than that of modern wind farms that utilize horizontal-axis wind turbines. The studies by Dabiri [1] and Zanforlin and Nishino [2], do not contain a co-rotating configuration

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